Experience and the World's Own Language : A Critique of John Mcdowell's Empiricism - Richard Gaskin

Experience and the World's Own Language

A Critique of John Mcdowell's Empiricism

By: Richard Gaskin

Hardcover | 1 March 2006

At a Glance

Hardcover


$140.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $35.19 with

 or 

Aims to ship in 7 to 10 business days

John McDowell''s ''minimal empiricism'' is one of the most influential and widely discussed doctrines in contemporary philosophy. Richard Gaskin subjects it to careful examination and criticism. The doctrine is undermined, he argues, by inadequacies in the way McDowell conceives what he styles the ''order of justification'' connecting world, experience, and judgement. McDowell''s conception of the roles played by causation and nature in this order is threatened with vacuity; and the requirements of self-consciousness and verbal articulacy which he places on subjects participating in the justificatory relation between experience and judgement are unwarranted, and have the implausible consequence that infants and non-human animals are excluded from the ''order of justification'' and so are deprived of experience of the world. Above all, McDowell''s position is vitiated by a substantial error he commits in the philosophy of language: following ancient tradition rather than Frege''s radical departure from that tradition, he locates concepts at the level of sense rather than at the level of reference in the semantical hierarchy. This error generates an unwanted Kantian transcendental idealism which in effect delivers a reductio ad absurdum of McDowell''s metaphysical economy. Gaskin goes on to show how to correct the mistake, and thereby presents his own version of empiricism. First we must follow Frege in his location of concepts at the level of reference, but then we must go beyond Frege and locate not only concepts but also propositions at that level; and this in turn requires us to take seriously an idea which McDowell mentions only to reject, that of objects as speaking to us ''in the world''s own language''. If empiricism is to have any chance of success it must be still more minimal in its pretensions than McDowell allows: in particular, it must abandon the individualistic and intellectualistic construction which McDowell places on the ''order of justification''.
Industry Reviews
Gaskin has thought hard about a range of challenging topics- perception, content, knowledge, singular thought, reference -and he has insightful and suggestive things to say about them. The book repays close reading. * Jason Bridges, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews *

More in Philosophy of Language

Unstructured Content - Peter van Elswyk

$270.95

The Hedgehog And The Fox : An Essay on Tolstoy's View of History - Isaiah Berlin
Frege's Pragmatics : Mind, Meaning and Metaphysics - Thorsten Sander

RRP $170.00

$141.40

17%
OFF
Deception : Mind, Metaphor, Memes, and Mimicry Machines - Rukmini Bhaya Nair
Racism and 'Free Speech' - Anshuman A. Mondal

RRP $44.99

$42.40

The Ethics of Advising - Monique Jonas

$237.25

Negative Hermeneutics and the Question of Practice - Nicholas Davey
The Autonomy of Reference : On the Relational Structure of Nominals - Zoltán Vecsey
The Rhetoric of Manipulation : Unmasking Semantic Perversions - Robert Harvey